Haley Pharo’s New Video “Prisoner” Debuts on PopMatters.com


view on popmatters.com http://bit.ly/1qNnrYK

 

Singer and songwriter Haley Pharo crafts pop music that’s clearly inspired by the Dr. Luke school of production, as the latest video from her recently self-titled album attests. The kinetic visuals and rapid-fire instrumentation of “Prisoner” make for a thrilling musical ride, one grounded in a strong performance by Pharo.

Last Call For The Quiet Life – Full LP Premiere Stream

Thanks to the folks at American Songwriter for their support! click to visit their site and stream the entire record a week before release!

http://www.americansongwriter.com/2014/08/album-premiere-buddy-last-call-quiet-life/

http://bit.ly/1ujJ73X 

 

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Buddy interviewed!

there were a couple of interviews this week with buddy first with artistdirect and then the examiner

ARTIST DIRECT

http://www.artistdirect.com/entertainment-news/article/interview-buddy/11085674

http://bit.ly/1ujUY1Y

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THE EXAMINER

http://www.examiner.com/article/buddy-talks-about-his-last-call-for-the-quiet-life 

http://exm.nr/1ujMkAv

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Buddy: Getting a little louder – Philthy Magazine sits down with Buddy. (AUG 2014)

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Buddy is a guy who’s as likeable as his name would imply. Buddy is also not simply a guy, but a band… but also still a guy… Like  nearly every outfit I’ve interviewed this summer (seriously, just look at the site), Buddy began as a singer/songwriter, but evolved into a band. Buddy is a guy from Portland, Oregon who relocated to LA in 2002. In 2006 he was forced to collect a backing band, due to a broken arm that coincided with his invitation to open for Tommy Stinson. His live band quickly became a legitimate band. Buddy’s first album, Alterations and Repairs, didn’t hit shelves until 2007, but by that point the project had already transformed into a full-fledged rock outfit, who spent the next several years on the road. However, Buddy’s sophomore effort, Last Call for the Quiet Life, the first release to truly capture the band’s collective dynamic, is just set to drop on August 19th. And he recently took some time to tell me the history of the project, in addition to recent occurrences, including a “memorable” night in Philly.

Although the album is yet to drop, Buddy has already visited the City of Brotherly Love and Sisterly Affection this summer, when he toured alongside Ben Ottewell of Gomez, and whose local stop at Milkboy also included PHILTHY favorite Swear and Shake. While the show was a bit sparsely attended, Buddy certainly enjoyed himself, and even concluded the set playing unplugged, in the middle of the floor. He also tells me that he had a special affinity for Center City’s favorite bar/restaurant/coffee shop/venue.

“I really like that club and those guys at Milkboy won me over. We drove all the way back to the hotel in Delaware and I checked in and realized I didn’t have my jacket and my jacket had my wallet in it and they actually stayed up until like 3 in the morning to wait for me, so I’m quite grateful to them. And I like rooms like that. The attendance was pretty light, but it was at least intimate enough and dark enough that it still felt okay, as opposed to the rooms where it’s huge and bright and just looks so empty. But I get excited whenever I play a city I haven’t before and Philadelphia is one of those, as was Detroit and Milwaukee. It was the same thing in Milwaukee. There weren’t a lot of people, but it felt relatively intimate.”

While recent years have seen many musicians and artists relocating from more “glamorous” settings, like Los Angeles and New York City, to the more DIY, Bohemian Portland, Oregon, Buddy did the opposite. So I’m inclined to ask what inspired this relocation, but he tells me the move actually happened more organically and haphazardly than he originally intended.

“I’d lived in Portland my whole life and just wanted a change. I thought LA would be temporary. I hadn’t planned on moving out here to play music, but it just kind of happened and it grew on me like a fungus. It’s a really supportive environment that gave me roots here and just kind of kept growing on me and, at one point, not to sound lazy, but I just thought, ‘If I go anywhere else, it’s going to be hard to get something going like this.’”

Last Call for the Quiet Life includes contributions from many of his LA peers, including songwriting partner, producer, and engineer Will Golden, in addition to PHILTHY endorsed artists Holly Conlan and Morgan Nagler(and even the likes of Michelle Branch and Cary Brothers… among many others). I tell him that my initial attraction to the album was actually my fandom of his close friend Holly Conlan and he explains that the collection of musicians he works with in LA weren’t necessarily people he sought out, but that happened to be there, supportive, and doing things that he really admired.

“The scene for me is just great because I found one. It just kind of fell into my lap. They’re just people I like hanging out with. 95% of it is just this community of friends that are musicians and we all just help each other out. [Holly]’s one of my besties and it’s just like help each other with different things. If she’s recording, I’ll come down and help her and if I’m recording, she’ll just come down and help me out. It’s all just friendships and we like what each other are doing. We’re fans of each other.”

The sounds found on Last Call for the Quiet Life merge the refined aesthetic of a singer/songwriter with that of a larger, more collaborative, rock collective. It’s actually not too far from Tom Petty on his most soulful and communal efforts. It’s introspective, but also a bit of a rally for existential reflection. I ask Buddy about the actual process behind the writing and recording of the songs and he tells me that his work with Will Golden is certainly the most significant variation from his previous work.

“It’s totally different from the first EP and full-length. When I started, it was just very singer/songwriter. When I wrote the songs it was just at the edge of my bed at 4 in the morning. This was a collaborative effort with Will Golden. It was fun for me to collaborate on a record and it pulled me and stretched me a little, like to get out of your comfort zone. It felt really organic. It felt like we left the studio every day with a new song. On my other records it’s easier to pinpoint my influences because, with Will, we were never going for anything. We just kind of let it happen. We wrote like 30 songs and the songs on the record just seemed to fit well as a group.”

I ask Buddy about how he plans to spend the rest of the year and he tells me that he does plan to spend some time on the road, but that his bond with Will is as strong as ever and has already propelled the duo to composing new music: “We’ll do some touring. I don’t know exactly what or when, but I’m going to do a solo tour in Australia in October, which I’m really excited about, but Will and I have already started writing the next one. We started writing the day we got back from tour.”

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Buddy makes a mixtape

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Ever wonder what a mix-tape from me would sound like??

Well, fret no more…Magnet (magazine) woo’d me into making one for them and in turn you!

http://www.magnetmagazine.com/2014/07/31/buddy-makes-magnet-a-mix-tape/

Interview: LA-based band Buddy pals around with GroundSounds

http://groundsounds.com/2014/07/25/interview-buddy/

 

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Buddy’s “Fault Lines” PREMIERES on purevolume.com

purevolume premiere.

Haley Pharo at Room5 this Friday

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Weak Currents Boing Boing Feature – 12,000+ streams

Boing Boing Feature

Buddy Announces New Record Aug 19th

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Download: “Weak Currents” via Boing Boing or SoundCloud

 

Los Angeles-based band Buddy is excited to announce the release of Last Call For The Quiet Life out August 19 which is available now for pre-order on iTunes. Boing Boing has premiered the album’s lead track “Weak Currents” which is also available to stream and share via SoundCloud. Boing Boing said, “It’s his best work…The sound is lush where his previous work was spare, and it features lots of lovely vocal harmonies.” Buddy is currently on tour supporting Ben Ottewell of Gomez. The tour will make stops in major markets such as Philadelphia, Boston, Washington D.C., Atlanta and more. All upcoming shows are listed below. Having been locked away writing and recording their upcoming album, the band is eagerly anticipating playing both old and new songs at the upcoming shows.
Buddy is a Portland-born musician who relocated to Los Angeles in 2002, the band evolved from an acoustic project to a full-fledged rock outfit. It was an aesthetic that the group, which came together in 2006 when Buddy was asked to open for Tommy Stinson but couldn’t play guitar with a broken arm and needed a backing band, honed during their live shows on stages around LA and on tour across the country for several years. When Buddy began writing material for a second full-length the musical goals felt fuzzy, the lines between acoustic singer-songwriter and rock band blurred. Buddy and his band recorded an entire new album in 2009 and, after touring with Gomez in 2010, determined to scrap it.

 

Buddy spent the next year feeling lost, uncertain how to proceed with the band, unsure of where to take the music. He was searching for a new beginning, one that felt organic to him as a musician. It turned out that collaboration was the key to hitting the restart button. Five tracks from the unreleased album did eventually emerge in 2012 as the Campfire EP, but Buddy needed a new inspiration for his second album. In 2012, Buddy and Will Golden started writing and recording together in Los Angeles. It was a harmonious partnership, with Will leading the charge on much of the album’s production. The songs were bigger and fuller, propelled by more electronic elements than Buddy had previously employed.

The album itself, Last Call For The Quiet Life, reflects Buddy’s struggle and reconciliation with himself over the past few years. For him, the songs are a sort of confessional therapy, a place to channel the issues and ideas that plague his mind. One song, “Anchor,” even began as a poem Buddy had written, which was a new method of songwriting for him. The album’s title is derived from a line in the album’s first track, embodying the idea that you never know how long the window of opportunity will be open. The music itself embraces a more up-tempo rock vibe that reflects Buddy’s live performance, each instrument layering together to create a buoyant but introspective indie pop vibe.
Last Call For The Quiet Life features several guest musicians including Michelle Branch, Cary Brothers and Holly Conlan, who lend their voices to the soaring melodies. The duo finished recording the album in early 2013 and went to Seattle in February and March to mix the record with Phil Ek at Avast Studios. The album was mastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound in March 2013 in New York City. The final album is a strikingly evocative collection of songs that represents the musicians who made it. From shimmering opener “Weak Currents” to sparsely wrought closer “Scrap Metal,” Last Call For The Quiet Life contains the ups and downs of existence and relationships and family, and the highs and lows of finding yourself in your own life. Each note resonates with its own emotion, creating an overall narrative of what it means to find the right beginning. Or, to let it find us.
“When you start something you don’t know where it’s going to go,” Buddy says. “The whole record felt like solid footing right away. It wasn’t anguished over. We just did what we both do. I needed to feel scared and not know where it was going. I had to learn to just let it happen and let it keep unfolding. When you do that, suddenly you have these songs and they all go together.”